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     AN OVERVIEW OF THIRD STREAM / CONFLUENT MUSIC

     AND THE

     INVOLVEMENT OF AUSTRALIAN COMPOSERS

     NADIA BURGESS

     PARTIAL FULFILMENT OF THE REQUIREMENTS

     FOR THE DEGREE

     MASTER OF MUSIC (COMPOSITION)

    SYDNEY CONSERVATORIUM OF MUSIC

    UNIVERSITY OF SYDNEY

     2004

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     I, Nadia Burgess, declare that this essay is the result of my own efforts.

    Signed:

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    CONTENTS

    1. List of Musical Examples.........................................................................................3  

    2. Abstract......................................................................................................................4

    3. Introduction...............................................................................................................5

    4. Historical Overview of Third Stream Composers and Recordings,

    in the USA, England and Europe:

    Up to the 1950s...............................................................................................................9

    The 1960s......................................................................................................................24

    The 1970s and the 1980s...............................................................................................31

    From the 1990s to 2004.................................................................................................37

    5. On the African Front...............................................................................................43

    6. Third Stream / Confluent Music in Australia up to 2004....................................50

    7. Conclusion................................................................................................................70

    8. Bibliography............................................................................................................71

    9. Discography and Videos.........................................................................................78

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     LIST OF MUSICAL EXAMPLES

    1. Lewis, John. “Django.”..............................................................................................17

    2. Brubeck, Dave. “Blue Rondo a la Turk.” ..................................................................27

    3. Evans, Bill. “Time Remembered.”.............................................................................29

    4. Schneider, Maria. “Gush.”..........................................................................................41

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     Abstract

    In this essay the author discusses the origins, evolution and impact of Third Stream 

    music, the broader outgrowth of it being Confluent  music.

    Reference is made to relevant compositions and recordings from the USA, England and

    Europe, up to 2004.

    Background information about the composers is provided.

    Compositions including elements from African music are being examined.

    The author investigates the involvement, up to 2004, of Australian composers and

    composers resident in Australia. 

    A substantial bibliography and discography is included.

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     Introduction

    At a lecture in 1957 at the Brandeis University, Massachusetts, USA, Gunther Schuller 

    (1925- ), applied the term third stream to a style of music which, in his words:

    through improvisation or written composition or both, synthesizes the essential characteristics and

    techniques of contemporary Western art music and other musical traditions. At the heart of this

    concept is the notion that any music stands to profit from a confrontation with another; thus

    composers of Western art music can learn a great deal from the rhythmic vitality and swing of jazz,

    while jazz musicians can find new avenues of development in the large-scale forms and complex tonal

    systems of classical music. The term was originally applied to a style in which attempts were made to

    fuse basic elements of jazz and Western art music - the two mainstreams joining to form a‘third

    stream.’1 

    Third stream music is pre-dominantly composed for ensembles consisting of jazz

    musicians and instrumentalists who usually perform Western art music, (musicians who

    can perform both styles well are scarce), a jazz rhythm section being optional.2 It can also

    be seen as the fruit of the labour of mainly composers, rather than jazz performers, who

    wished to blend improvisation and jazz practices into compositions in the style of

    contemporary Western art music.3 

    1 Gunther Schuller, “Third stream,” in The New Grove Dictionary of Music and Musicians, 2nd ed., ed.

    Stanley Sadie (London: Macmillan Publishers Ltd., 2001), Vol. 25, 401.2 Terry Teachout, “The Third Stream and After,” in “Jazz and Classical Music,” The Oxford Companion to

     Jazz, ed. Bill Kirchner (New York: Oxford University Press, 2000), 354.3 Frank Tirro, Jazz: A History, 2nd ed. (New York: W.W. Norton&Company, Inc., 1993), 369.

    .

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    This resulted in practical problems:

    1. most musicians with a classical background are not used to improvising, and they have

    a difficulty in realizing the unwritten rhythmic nuances of the jazz idiom;

    2. jazz improvisation, which is mostly based on repetitive harmonic patterns, forms a

    huge contrast to the discipline, literal notation and rigid adherence to extended form

    of Western art music;

    3. the difficulty in maintaining a balance between electronically amplified instruments

    (and drums) in jazz ensembles and unamplified instruments in classical ensembles.4 

    Schuller continues:

    Since the late 1950s the application of the term ‘third stream’ has broadened, notably through the

    work of pianist Ran Blake, to encompass fusions of classical music with elements drawn not only from

    African-American sources but also from other vernacular traditions, including Turkish, Greek,

    Hindustani, Russian and Cuban music, among others.5 

    It became known as confluent music,6 a fusion of Western art music with jazz and world

    music (African music, Eastern music, ethnic music, etc.).

    In a collection of his writings, Musings, Schuller wrote during the 1980s: 

    4 Terry Teachout, “The Third Stream and After,” 355.

    5 Gunther Schuller, “Third stream,” 401.

    6 Joseph Stuessy, “The confluence of jazz and classical music from 1950 to 1970” (PhD dissertation,

    Eastman School of Music, 1978). 

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    attended summer schools at the Lenox School of Jazz in Massachusetts, where he studied

    with Gunther Schuller and John Lewis. Blake also studied with Oscar Peterson, Mary

    Lou Williams, Bill Evans and Thelonius Monk. In 1973 he was appointed Chairperson of

    the Department of Third Stream Music at the New England Conservatory, and now heads

    the Department of Contemporary Improvisation there, of which the curriculum integrates

     jazz, classical and ethnic music.9 He has performed widely and recorded as soloist. He

    has written several journal articles about third stream music, eg. “Third Stream and

    the Importance of the Ear.”10 

    9 Ed Hazel, “Blake, Ran” in The New Grove Dictionary of Jazz, 2nd ed., ed. Barry Kernfeld (London:

    Macmillan Publishers, Ltd., 2002), Vol. 1, 233.10

     Ran Blake, “Third Stream and the Importance of the Ear.” Jazz Forum (1985): 46-49.

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     Historical Overview of Third Stream Composers

     and Recordings in the USA, England and Europe

    Up to the 1950s

    Earlier in the 20th century a combination of elements from Western art music and jazz

    can be found in the music of several prominent composers of Western art music such as

    Charles Ives, Claude Debussy, Erik Satie, Darius Milhaud, Igor Stravinsky, Paul

    Hindemith,11

      Maurice Ravel, Aaron Copland, as well as jazz composers Scott Joplin,

    George Gershwin, Duke Ellington, and Morton Gould:

    American composer Charles Ives (1874-1954): The Circus Band  (1894) and the 3rd

    Sonata for Piano and Violin (1904);

    African / American Ragtime composer Scott Joplin (1868-1917): A ragtime opera called

    Treemonisha (1911) and several through-composed rags, eg. Maple Leaf Rag;

    French composer Claude Debussy (1862-1916): Golliwog’s Cakewalk  (1908), Preludes 

    (1910-1913) eg. Bruyeres;

    French composer Erik Satie (1866-1925): Parade (1917);

    Russian-born composer Igor Stravinsky (1882-1971): L’histoire du soldat (1918),

     Ragtime for Eleven Instruments (1918) and Piano Rag-Music (1919);

    German composer Paul Hindemith (1895-1963): Suite fur Klavier (1922);

    11 Markus Plattner, “Aspects of Third Stream Works” (M.Mus. Thesis, Sydney Conservatorium of Music,

    2001), 3-6.

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    French composer Darius Milhaud (1892-1974): jazz fugue in the 2nd movement of

     La creation du monde (1923);

    American composer George Gershwin (1898-1937): one-act opera Blue Monday (1922),

     Rhapsody in Blue (1924), Piano Concerto in F  (1925), Preludes for Piano (1927), and

    the opera Porgy and Bess (1935);

    American composer Aaron Copland (1900-1990): Piano Concerto (1927);

    French composer Maurice Ravel (1875-1937): Piano Concerto in G (1931);

    African / American composer Duke Ellington (1899-1974): Creole Rhapsody (1931),

     Reminiscing in Tempo (1935), and Black, Brown and Beige (1943);12

     

    American composer Morton Gould (1913-1996 ): Interplay (1943) and Concerto for

    Orchestra (1944).

    Many jazz musicians have looked to European music for inspiration, eg. cornet player

    Bix Beiderbecke (1903-1931), whilst some others received classical training first, eg.

    pianist Earl Hines (1903-1983). Prolific composer, Duke Ellington, had a long and

    successful career, and developed a unique musical style. His compositional energies

    broke out of the boundaries of mainstream jazz and the dance hall, into large-scale form

    and the concert hall. From 1949 the microgroove 12 inch 33&1/3 r.p.m. long playing

    vinyl records were introduced by Columbia records, allowing 25 minutes of playing time

    per side. This lifted the three minute restriction from before, allowing extended

    compositions and improvisations to be recorded.

    12  Duke Ellington: Excerpts from “Black, Brown and Beige” (by Louie Bellson and His All-Star

    Orchestra), BMG Music 01612-65096-2, 1994, CD.

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    A pioneer in modern jazz, pianist Stan Kenton (1911-1979), from the West Coast of the

    USA, formed his 14-piece jazz orchestra in 1940, which grew to 18 members by 1945

    and to 20 members a few years later. The orchestra’s repertoire included compositions

    which leaned heavily towards contemporary Western art music with frequent tempo

    changes, and was criticised for sacrificing the true jazz feel for innovation.

    Kenton employed highly skilled arrangers / composers such as Pete Rugolo (1915 - ),

    who had studied with Darius Milhaud previously. Rugolo worked for Kenton during the

    most successful period of the band, i.e. 1945-49, which was characterised by layers of

    big, elaborate clusters of sound.13 

    The forward-looking composer, Robert Graettinger (1923-1957), a graduate of

    Westlake College, wrote Thermopolae for the Kenton band in 1947 and the

    unconventional City of Glass which is scored for 10 violins, 3 violas, 3 cellos, 5

    saxophones, 3 French horns, 5 trumpets, 5 trombones, tuba, bongo, drums, guitar, 2

    basses and piano. This new, avant-garde music literally stunned the members of the

    orchestra, as well as the audience at its premiere at the Chicago Civic Opera in 1948. It is

    featured along with This Modern World  ( A Cello, A Trumpet, An Orchestra) by

    Graettinger on the album Stan Kenton and his Orchestra: City of Glass and This Modern

    World  (1951).

    14

     

    City of Glass consists of three movements:

    13 J. Bradford Robinson and Barry Kernfeld, “Kenton, Stan(ley Newcomb),” in The New Grove Dictionary

    of Jazz, 2nd ed., ed. Barry Kernfeld (London: Macmillan Publishers, Ltd., 2002), Vol. 2, 482 - 484.14

     Stan Kenton and His Orchestra: City of Glass and This Modern World, Creative World, Inc., ST 1006,

    1951 -53, Vinyl.

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    develops in the second half;

    2. Bob Graettinger’s Incidents in Jazz is a swing which breaks into a Latin feel briefly,

    but the bebop unison lines in the saxes and exclamations by the brass are angular and

    unusual for the time;

    3. Also featured is Solitaire by trombonist, Bill Russo (1928-2003), who worked for the

    Kenton orchestra from 1950-54, contributing several experimental compositions. Russo

    later taught at the Lenox School of Jazz and the Manhattan School of Music. He

    composed An Image of Man for alto sax, guitar and string quartet in 1958.

    Kenton led his 43-piece Innovations in Modern Music Orchestra on nationwide tours

    performing in concert halls in the early 1950s. Breaking away from dance music, Kenton

    was hoping to narrow the gap between jazz and classical music. Tenor saxophonist, Bill

    Holman (1927- ), worked for Kenton from 1952-56, continuing to write for the orchestra

    until the 1970s. A contrapuntal piece in the jazz idiom by Holman,  (often experimenting

    with classical form), Invention for Guitar and Trumpet  and Improvisation by Russo are

    featured on New Concepts in Artistry in Rhythm17

     (1952). In 1954 Kenton was honoured

    by the Down Beat  Hall of Fame for his contribution to American Music, Louis

    Armstrong and Glenn Miller being his forerunners. In 1965 Stan Kenton founded the

    short-lived 23-piece Los Angeles Neophonic Orchestra, which featured Austrian

    Friedrich Gulda performing his Jazz Piano Concerto. Kenton endured sharp attacks

    from jazz critics over the years, but produced sensitive and inventive big band music and

    17 Stan Kenton: New Concepts in Artistry in Rhythm, Capitol Records CDP 7 92865-2, 1952, Re-release on

    CD.

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    featured several outstanding jazz soloists. Some of his arrangements are kept at the

    North Texas State University.18 

    On the East Coast of the USA, a giant in the history of jazz, trumpeter Miles Davis 

    (1926-1991), made a huge impact with the recording The Birth of the Cool (New York,

    January 1949 - March 1950),19

     produced by Walter Rivers and Pete Rugolo, - a third

    stream extension of the Cool style.20 The nonet included:

    Miles Davis - trumpet

    J.J. Johnson - trombone

    Gunther Schuller - French horn

    John Barber - tuba

    Lee Konitz - alto sax

    Gerry Mulligan (who wrote for The Stan Kenton Orchestra in 1951) - baritone sax

    John Lewis – piano

    Nelson Boyd - bass

    Kenny Clarke / Max Roach - drums.

    This recording features the scores of Boplicity and Moondreams by arranger Gil Evans 

    (1912-1988). Moondreams, by Chummy MacGregor and Johnny Mercer, is clad in

    Evans’ unique timbral textures with strong third stream tendencies and is one of the most

    stunning ballad arrangements ever written. It includes short alto sax, and baritone sax

    18  Bradford Robinson and Barry Kernfeld, “Kenton, Stan(ley Newcomb),” 483.

    19  Miles Davis: The Birth of the Cool, Capitol Records 7243 5 30117 2 7, 1949, Re-release on CD.

    20 David W. Megill and Paul O.W. Tanner, “Classical / Jazz Distinctions,” Jazz Issues.(Dubuque, Iowa: 

    Wm. C. Brown Communications, 1993), 286-295.

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    improvisations, and a contrapuntal section towards the end with slow moving

    contrapuntal parts and prominence of the French horn. Evans wrote for Claude

    Thornhill’s big band in the late 1940s, adding two French horns and a tuba and restrained

    the vibrato in the reeds and brass, producing a similar sophisticated sound as that of Duke

    Ellington and Eddie Sauter. His arrangements re-composed pieces and included

    orchestral improvisation, the emphasis being on the ensemble, rather than soloists.21 

    Lennie Tristano (1919-1978), New York-based jazz pianist and teacher, who studied at

    the American Conservatory of Music in Chicago, influenced Bill Russo, Lee Konitz and

    Bill Evans. He recorded Intuition,22

     also produced by Pete Rugolo, with Warne Marsh in

    1949. The compositions Intuition and Digression by Tristano display counterpoint,

    advanced harmony and collective improvisation, with the minimum swing feel.

    African / American pianist and composer from the East Coast, John Lewis (1920-2001),

    a graduate from the Manhattan School of Music, was aware of and receptive to the

    developments on the West Coast. During the mid 1950s Lewis and Gunther Schuller

    established the Modern Jazz Society, later known as the Jazz and Classical Music

    Society, which was devoted to the performance of the less conventional music written by

    composers in the jazz field. The album The Modern Jazz Society: Presents a Concert of

    Contemporary Music (1955)23 features:

    21 Gunther Schuller, “Evans, Gil,” in The New Grove Dictionary of Jazz, 2nd ed., ed. Barry Kernfeld

    (London: Macmillan Publishers, Ltd., 2002), Vol. 1, 727.22

     Lennie Tristano and Warne Marsh: Intuition, Capitol Records CDP 7243 8 52771 2 2, 1949, Re-release

    on CD.

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    James Politis - flute

    Aaron Sachs, Anthony Sciacca, Tony Scott - clarinet

    Manuel Zegler - bassoon

    Stan Getz (from Stan Kenton’s orchestra in 1945) - tenor saxophone

    Lucky Thompson - tenor saxophone

    Gunther Schuller - French horn

    J.J. Johnson - trombone

    Janet Putnam - harp

    John Lewis - composer / arranger / pianist

    Percy Heath - double bass

    Connie Kay - drums.

    The record includes:

     Little David’s Fugue, by John Lewis, in which the expositions are composed and the

    episodes are improvisations on a predetermined chord progression;

     Midsommer , by John Lewis, is an adagio in rondo form, of which the harmony of the 2nd

    theme is used for improvisation;

    Turnpike, composed by J.J. Johnson (1924-2001), points to future directions;

     Django by John Lewis, arranged by Schuller, has a third stream intent in this author’s

    opinion. It is in symmetrical form:

    23 The Modern Jazz Society, Polygram Records, Verve 314 559 827-2, 1955. Re-release on CD.

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     Musical Example No. 1

    Slow opening section of 20 bars at MM 76 per crotchet. A: thematic material by the harp

    Swing improvisation section at MM 110 per crotchet: B - 12 bars, C - 8 bars, D - 12 bars

    (solos for the clarinet, saxophone and trombone with the backing provided by the

    ensemble plus bass and drums):

    B: harmonic basis derived from A, two chord changes per bar:

    Fmi Dmi7(b5) /  G7 C7 /  F7(b9) Bbmi7 /  Eb7 Ab7 /  Db7 G7 /  C7

    Fmi Dmi7(b5) /  G7 C7 /  F7(b9) Bbmi7 /  Eb7 Ab7 /  Db7 C7 /  Fmi6  //

    C: tonic pedal 

    D: Bbmi Gmi7(b5) /  C7 F7 /  Bb7 Ebmi7 /  Ab7 Db7 /  

    Gb7  /  Gb7  /   Db7  /   Db7  /

    Gb7  /  Gb7  /   Db7  /  C7  //

    E: interlude of last 8 bars of A played in double time by tutti before next soloist

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    A: Repeat of opening section by the whole ensemble. 

    Lewis, was the leader of the Modern Jazz Quartet, in which he found a perfect vehicle for

    expressing his ideas as composer. This quartet grew directly out of the Dizzy Gillespie

    big band, because its rhythm section played together nightly to give the brass section the

    chance to re-group. When Dizzy’s band broke up in 1950, vibist Milt Jackson, pianist

    John Lewis, bassist Ray Brown and drummer Kenny Clarke, all “graduates” from bop

    combos of the 1940s, recorded as the Milt Jackson Quartet. Shortly thereafter, Brown

    went on the road with his wife, Ella Fitzgerald, and was replaced by Percy Heath. After

    another recording, the group started to attract attention and resolved to stay together,

    keeping the same initials MJQ, which then stood for the Modern Jazz Quartet. Connie

    Kay joined the group when Kenny Clarke left for Europe in 1955. Ironically the quartet

    developed its first big following playing the concert halls of Europe. Almost all the

    arrangements for the quartet were written by Lewis, and his compositions for the group

    included film scores, ballets and works for quartet and symphony orchestra.24 Lewis’

    piano playing often featured counter-melodies which add a polyphonic flavour and his

    solos display great motivic unity.25

     He played a key role in the development of

    third stream music. A composition which reflects this is European Windows (1958),26 a

    composition for jazz rhythm section and soloists with the Stuttgart Chamber Orchestra

    24 Bradford Robinson, “Modern Jazz Quartet,” in The New Grove Dictionary of Music and Musicians, 2nd

    ed., ed. Stanley Sadie (London: Macmillan Publishers Ltd., 2001), Vol. 12, 453.25

     Thomas Owens, “Lewis, John,” in The New Grove Dictionary of Dictionary of Jazz, 2nd ed., ed. Barry

    Kernfeld (London: Macmillan Publishers, Ltd., 2002), Vol. 2, 584-585.26

      John Lewis: European Windows, RCA Victor Records LPM-1742, 1958, Vinyl.

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    conducted by Lewis. John Lewis directed annual summer schools at the School of Jazz at

    the Music Inn, Lenox, Massachusetts from 1957-1960, and the Monterey Jazz Festival

    1958-1982.

    Classically trained French pianist Jacques Loussier, famous for his improvisations on

    the music of J.S. Bach since 1959, said of John Lewis:

    I began to listen to jazz seriously in the early 1950s, just as the Modern Jazz Quartet was starting to

    become famous, and I noticed a strange paradox. Just as I was beginning seriously to experiment with

    putting some jazz into my classical playing, I realised that the MJQ’s pianist, John Lewis, was trying to

    bring classical elements into his jazz playing. I felt John wanted so, so much to be a classical pianist,

    while I was exactly the contrary.27 

    John Lewis taught at the City College of New York and at Harvard University during the

    1970s. The Modern Jazz Quartet became the longest-lived combo in jazz history and

    delighted audiences all over the world with their special brand of music, eg. The Best of

    The Modern Jazz Quartet (1984).28

     Lewis founded the American Jazz Orchestra in 1985.

    The record, Modern Jazz Concert (1957),29

     features six compositions commissioned by

    the 1957 Brandeis University Festival of the Arts. The ensemble, conducted by Gunther

    Schuller (who provided comprehensive cover notes) and George Russell, consisted of:

    27 Loussier, J. Cover Notes by Alyn Shipton of The Jacques Loussier Trio : The Bach Book, Telarc CD-

    83474, CD.28

     The Best of The Modern Jazz Quartet, Pablo Records PACD-2405-423-2, 1955, Re-release on CD.29

      Modern Jazz Concert, Columbia Records WL 127, 1957, Vinyl.

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    Hal McKusick and John de la Porta - saxes

    Louis Mucci and Art Farmer - trumpets

    Jimmy Knepper - trombone

    Robert Di Domenica - flute

    Manuel Zegler - bassoon

    Bill Evans - piano

    Teddy Charles - vibes

    Joe Benjamin - bass

    Margaret - harp

    James Buffington - French horn

    Barry Galbraith - guitar

    Teddy Sommer – drums.

    The compositions featured are:

    On Green Mountain by Harold Shapero (1920- ) is a chaconne after Monteverdi, which

    involves jazz improvisation on a classical theme; 

    Suspensions by Jimmy Giuffre (1921- ) is quite contrapuntal and contains no

    improvisation;

     All Set by Milton Babbitt (1916- ) is very contemporary in flavour;

    Transformation, by Gunther Schuller, is a passacaglia which is gradually transformed

    into a jazz dominated piece, with improvisation threaded through with care;

     Revelations (1st movement) by bassist Charles Mingus (1922-1979) exhibits his great

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    skill as composer and is an example of his unique achievement of minimizing the line

    between composition and improvisation, yet maintaining the flow of the latter.

    Composer / arranger George Russell (1923- ) previously worked for Dizzy

    Gillespie and Artie Shaw, and wrote a book called The Lydian Chromatic Concept of

    Tonal Organization. By the late 1950s Russell was teaching at the summer schools at the

    Lenox School of Jazz, and was composing on a large scale. Along with Gil Evans, he

    was regarded as a leading jazz composer, who maintained form and harmony within an

    advanced jazz idiom, as well as a balance between composition and improvisation.30 On

     A Modern Jazz Concert his composition All About Rosie consists of three movements,

    fast-slow-fast (all in D minor) based on a traditional tune. It utilizes elements of jazz such

    as instrumentation, performance practise, harmony, and improvisation, and classical

    instrumentaion, extended form, bitonality and devices of development. It is scored for

    flute, 2 saxophones, bassoon, French horn , 2 trumpets, 1 trombone, piano, guitar, bass

    and drums. Movements 1 and 2 are through-composed, but the 3rd movement includes

    several improvised solos of which the one by Bill Evans is one of the most outstanding

    and famous solos in the repertoire of jazz piano. The solo lasts for four choruses of 32

    bars each: the first backed by cymbal only, the second by bass and drums in stop-time,

    the third by walking bass and the fourth by the ensemble.31 

    30 James G. Roy, Jr., Carman Moore, Barry Kernfeld, “Russell, George,” in The New Grove Dictionary of

     Music Online, ed. L. Macy. http://www.grovemusic.com. Accessed30 November 2004.31

     Frank Tirro, Jazz: A History, 42*- 44*.

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    Sketch, by John Lewis and Conversation by Gunther Schuller both composed for The

    Modern Jazz Quartet and The Beaux Arts String Quartet, are featured on a

    ground-breaking record entitled Third Stream Music / The Modern Jazz Quartet and

    Guests (1960).32

     They are great examples of the two ensembles integrating, yet

    maintaining their individual identity. In this author’s opinion Conversation is the more

    rigid of the two pieces, containing rather incongruous background figures by the strings

    to the improvisation of the quartet. The same record features Lewis’ Exposure for jazz

    quartet, clarinet, flute, bassoon, French horn, cello and harp which consists of

    unswinging non-jazz thematic material played by the ensemble accompanied by a swing

    feel in the drums, which is then followed by a swinging blues vibes solo with piano, bass

    and drums. More jazz-based is Da Capo by Lewis and the quasi-contrapuntal Fine by

    Jimmy Giuffre for The Modern Jazz Quartet and The Jimmy Giuffre Three

    (Giuffre on clarinet / tenor sax, Jim Hall on guitar and Ralph Pena on bass).

    It is the author’s opinion that Gunther Schuller, composer / French horn player /

    conductor, who was already teaching at the Manhattan School of Music at the age of 25

    and later became professor in composition at the School of Music at Yale, takes a rather

    serious, intellectual approach to his third stream compositions. However, Suite for

    Woodwind Ensemble,33 composed in 1957, contains a delightful blues without

    improvisation, reminiscent of the style of Gershwin, as second movement.

    32 Third Stream Music / The Modern Jazz Quartet and Guests, Atlantic Records SD 134, 1960, Vinyl. 

    33  Aulos-Blaserquintett Vol. 1: Barber / Carter / Cage / Schuller, KOCH International 3-1153-2, 1992, CD.

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    The 1960s

    The tension between composition and improvisation is emphasized in the suite Focus 

    (1961),35 composed and arranged by Eddie Sauter (1914-1981) from New York. It is

    performed by New York-born tenor saxophonist Stan Getz (1927-1991), accompanied by

    a string ensemble which includes members of the Beaux Arts Quartet, John Neves on

    bass, and Roy Haynes on drums / percussion. Getz improvises throughout in a jazz style

    along with the non-jazz composed string score, at times accompanied by a swing feel of

    brushed snare drum, as on I’m Late, I’m Late. An extraordinary effect is created with

    great success. Sauter wrote for the bands of Benny Goodman and Artie Shaw. His

    composition, The Maid With The Flaccid Air (1945) for Shaw, shows an influence from

    the French impressionists, such as extended harmony, and use of modes and exotic

    scales.

    Brilliant jazz trombonist J.J. Johnson, attracted attention with his compositions Poem

     for Brass (1956), El Camino Real and Sketch for Trombone and Orchestra (1959). He

    taught at the Lenox School of Jazz in 1960. However, Perceptions (six movements for

    soloist and a 21-piece orchestra including two harps, conducted by Gunther Schuller),

    recorded by jazz trumpet legend Dizzy Gillespie36 in 1961, reflects Johnson’s study of

    the music of Stravinsky, Bartok, Ravel, Hindemith, R. Strauss, Britten and Debussy, yet

    provides plenty of room for improvisation.

    35 Stan Getz: Focus, Polygram Records 821 982-2, 1961, re-release on CD.

    36  Dizzy Gillespie: Perceptions, Polygram Records 314 537 748-2, 1961, Re-release on CD.

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    In 1962, John Lewis founded the Orchestra U.S.A. which was conducted by Harold

    Faberman and Gunther Schuller, and consisted of musicians who were proficient in both

     jazz and Western art music. Examples of their recordings are:

    1. Concerto for Jazz Soloist and Orchestra by Bill Smith (1962),37

     which contains three

    compositions and performances by William O. Smith (1926- ): Concerto for Jazz Soloist

    and Orchestra, Variants for Solo Clarinet  and Mosaic  for Clarinet  and Piano 

    (Robert Suderburg); Smith studied at Juilliard School of Music in New York and with

    Darius Milhaud in California, later founding an octet with Dave Brubeck;

    2. Orchestra U.S.A.: Jazz Journey (1964),38

     produced by Teo Macero (1925- ), features

     Journey into Jazz composed and conducted by Gunther Schuller, which was performed at

    the First International Jazz Festival in Washington, D.C. in 1962, by The National

    Symphony Orchestra conducted by Schuller; an abbreviated version was broadcast by the

    CBS Television Network in 1964 and Leonard Bernstein narrated it at one of the New

    York Philharmonic youth concerts, conducted by Schuller; the record also includes

    Silver , (similar in form to Django, but lighter in character) composed by John Lewis,

    who is the soloist;

    3. Orchestra U.S.A.: Sonorities,39 (1965), produced by Teo Macero, includes:

     Hex, by jazz composer Jimmy Giuffre, which leans more towards contemporary Western

    art music; Guiffre was a leader in avant-garde jazz at this time and composed a clarinet

    quintet and several pieces for solo instruments and string orchestra, eg.

    the through-composed Piece for Clarinet and String Orchestra in 1959; he also

    37 Two Sides of Bill Smith, Composers Recordings, Inc. CRI SD 320, 1964, Vinyl.

    38 Orchestra U.S.A.: Jazz Journey, Columbia Records CL 2247, 1964, Vinyl.

    39 Orchestra U.S.A.: Sonorities, Columbia Records CS 9195, 1965, Vinyl.

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    collaborated with alto sax player Lee Konitz on some recordings with strings, which

    contain third stream elements;

    Pressure by Teo Macero is an atonal orchestral piece; he also experimented with welding

    avant-garde classical ideas (eg. quarter tones) into the ensemble work of jazz combos

    and introduced studio-created electronic effects into the recording of his composition

    Sounds of May in 1955.40

     

    Composer / arranger Gil Evans is known for his tremendous skill in the use of

    blends of timbre. The record The Gil Evans Orchestra: Out of the Cool (1961)41 includes

    his Le Navada and Sunken Treasure, and Stratusphunk  by George Russell. One of Gil

    Evans’ albums with Miles Davis, Sketches of Spain recorded in 1959-60,42 produced by

    Teo Macero, displays voicings in tight proximity, polyphony and complex harmony. It

    contains arrangements by Evans of the slow movement of Rodrigo’s Concierto De

     Arranjuez and Manuel de Falla’s Will O’ The Wisp, as well as The Pan Piper , Saeta and

    Solea composed by Evans, in which third stream tendencies are displayed.

    Jazz pianist, Dave Brubeck (1920- ), studied with Darius Milhaud at Mills College in

    California in the mid 1940s, along with Bill Smith. During the late 1950s Brubeck

    started experimenting with unusual time signatures and in 1959 his quartet recorded the

    first jazz instrumental piece to sell a million copies, Take Five, in 5/4 time, by alto sax

    40 Frank Tirro, Jazz: A History, 341-342.

    41 Gil Evans Orchestra: Out of the Cool, Impulse Records 254 615-2, 1961, Re-release on CD.

    42  Miles Davis: Sketches of Spain, Columbia Records CBS 460604 2, 1967, Re-release on CD.

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    player, Paul Desmond. It was released with Brubeck’s Blue Rondo a la Turk,

    which is in 9/8, grouped as 2+2+2+3:

     Musical Example No. 2

    Etc.

    In 1963 the Dave Brubeck Quartet and Orchestra recorded Time Changes,43 produced by

    Teo Macero. It includes Elementals for Jazz Quartet and Orchestra, (which contains

    polyrhythms, polytonality and unusual non-jazz resources), conducted by Rayburn

    Wright. Brubeck has written ballet music, chamber music, a musical, oratorios, cantatas

    and solo piano music. As a celebration of Dave Brubeck’s 80th birthday,  Dave Brubeck

     Live with the LSO44 was recorded London, in December 2000. It includes Chorale by

    Dave Brubeck, an arrangement of Take Five by conductor Russell Gloyd and

    arrangements of Brubeck’s compositions by his sons Darius, Chris and brother, Howard.

    It features Dave Brubeck - piano, Darius Brubeck - piano, Chris Brubeck -

    bass trombone / electric bass, Matthew Brubeck - cello, Dan Brubeck - drums, Bobby

    Militello - alto sax / flute, Alec Dankworth - double bass.

    Bill Evans (1929-1980), initially a classical pianist, set out along a unique

    43 The Dave Brubeck Quartet with Orchestra: Time Changes, Columbia Records CS 8927, 1963, Vinyl.

    44  Dave Brubeck Live with the LSO, LSO Mode / LSO Live 0011, 2001, CD.

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    path, his trio perfecting the sensitive art of trio playing45

     with refined harmony and

    implied polyphony. His lyrical, introspective and sensitive piano playing reflects his

    awareness of the music of J.S. Bach through to Chopin and Webern, as in eg. Peace

    Piece (1958), improvisation remaining paramount and structured.46

     On the solo album

    Conversations With Myself (1963),47

     he performs along with pre-recordings of himself,

    made possible by the development of recording techniques at the time. The record The

     Bill Evans Trio: With Symphony Orchestra (1966), is a collaboration with conductor /

    composer / arranger Claus Ogerman (1930- ) to produce versions of works by classical

    composers Bach, Chopin, Faure, Scriabin and Granados, and Evans’ compositions My

     Bells and Time Remembered .48

     

    45 Peter Pettinger, Bill Evans: How My Heart Sings, (New York:Yale University Press, 1998), 54.

    46 Gunther Schuller, “Jazz and classical music,” in The New Edition of the Encyclopedia of Jazz, ed.

    Leonard Feather (New York: Bonanza Books, 1960), 498.47

      Bill Evans: Conversations With Myself, Verve Records 685526, 1963, Re-release on CD.48

     The Bill Evans Trio: With Symphony Orchestra, Polygram Records 821 983-2, 1966, Re-release on CD.

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     Musical Example No. 3

     Medium Ballad Time Remembered   Bill Evans

    On this recording, Chuck Israels plays double bass and Larry Bunker and Grady Tate

    alternate on drums. On Time Remembered  (4mins 4secs), the introduction is a short

    conversation between the orchestra and the piano, swaying back and forth over two

    chords. The 26-bar chorus is stated by the orchestra, accompanied by bass and drums in a

    slow 4/4 at MM crotchet = 66. At the beginning of the improvised piano solo, the trio

    doubles the tempo (i.e. MM minim = 66 and the chord changes are twice as fast).

    In the second chorus of the solo, the cellos and basses play a counterline in the first eight

    bars, and the orchestra joins in on the second last bar with a pedal point-ending, which is

    faded out.

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    Thus, the interaction between the orchestra and the trio is minimal, yet, in this author’s

    opinion, the combination does produce a third stream version of this unusual, but

    enchanting ballad with extended harmony by Evans. The same record includes Elegia by

    Ogerman (an example of contemporary Western art music and jazz improvisation).

    Evans recorded Ogerman’s Symbiosis in 1974.

    Composer Carla Bley (1938- ), and her Austrian husband Michael Mantler (1943- )

    formed the Jazz Composers Guild Orchestra in New York in the mid 1960s and the

    record The Jazz Composers Orchestra: Communications (1968),49

     includes Mantler’s

    avant-garde jazz composition Communications (Nos.8-11). The orchestra consisted of

    reeds and brass with Don Cherry - cornet, Pharoah Sanders - tenor, and avant-garde jazz

    composer and free jazz pianist Cecil Taylor, bass and drums. The Gary Burton Quartet

    recorded Bley’s composition A Genuine Tong Funeral in 1967 and in 1971 she

    completed the large-scale eclectic jazz opera Escalator over the Hill, which was

    premiered in Cologne in 1997,50 a fusion of the avant-garde and jazz.

    49 The Jazz Composers Orchestra, JCOA Records 1001/2, 1968, Re-release on CD.

    50 J. Bradford Robinson, “Bley, Carla,” in The New Grove Dictionary of Jazz, 2nd ed., ed. Barry Kernfeld

    (London: Macmillan Publishers, Ltd., 2002), Vol. 1, 239.

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    The 1970s and 1980s

    American composer James L. Mack (1932-1991) wrote Legacy 51

     in 1978, and it was

    performed and recorded by the Ramsey Lewis Quartet and Symphony Orchestra. This is

    a light and most entertaining piece which reflects many musical characteristics from the

    1970s, as well as third stream elements. Also by Mack, After the Rain, performed by

    Ramsey Lewis - jazz piano and Linda Sanfilippo - cello on the record, 

    One Night Stand Keyboard Event  (1981),52 is a beautiful example of a third stream duet.

    Free jazz advocate, Ornette Coleman (1930- ), composed an orchestral piece in 21 short

    movements called Skies of America.53

     It was performed and recorded by the London

    Symphony Orchestra conducted by David Measham in 1972, but was not as successful as

    his combo work.

    English composers involved in third stream music include:

    John Dankworth (1927- ), alto saxophone / clarinet player and band-leader,  who

    collaborated with Hungarian-born Matyas Seiber on third stream jazz band and orchestra

    works in 1959, has written large-scale suites;54 

    Michael Gibbs (born in Rhodesia 1937- ), trombonist, who studied with Aaron Copland

    and Gunther Schuller, composed amongst others, Seven Songs for Quartet and Chamber

    51  Ramsey Lewis: Legacy, Columbia Records 35483, 1978, Vinyl.

    52 One Night Stand Keyboard Event , Columbia Records KC2 37100, 1981, Vinyl.

    53 Ornette Coleman: Skies of America, Columbia Records C 31562, 1972, Vinyl.

    54 Gunther Schuller, “Jazz and classical music,” 355.

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    Orchestra (with Gary Burton - vibes) and Europeana Jazzphony in 1994 (based on folk

    music featuring Markus Stockhausen on trumpet).55

     

    An early contribution from Europe came from Swiss composer Rolf Liebermann 

    (1910-1999). His attempt to combine jazz and classical performers, culminated in

    Concerto for Jazz Band and Orchestra from 1954.56

     French jazz pianist Claude Bolling 

    (1930- ) recorded Suite for Flute and Jazz Piano (plus bass & drums) with Jean-Pierre

    Rampal in 197557  and Toot Suite (for jazz piano, bass, drums and trumpet) with Maurice

    Andre in 1981.58

     In the author’s opinion, these delightful compositions for a classical 

    soloist with a jazz rhythm section are very successful. French pianist Jacques Loussier 

    (1934- ), famous for his improvisations on the music of J.S. Bach, Vivaldi, Debussy,

    Ravel and Satie, composed Nympheas59

     in 1999, which was inspired by paintings of the

    French Impressionist Claude Monet. It is an excellent example of contemporary third

    stream music in a jazz trio setting.

    During the 1970s multi-track master tapes, (recorded simultaneously or consecutively -

    up to 24 tracks onto a wide tape) mixed down to 2-track master tapes, made new and

    complex editing techniques possible. Acoustic instruments were amplified and the sound

    treated with wah-wah and fuzz pedals, echo devices and phase shifters. Electric guitars,

    55 Terry Teachout, “The Third Stream and After,” 355.

    56 Peter Ross, “Liebermann, Rolf,” in The New Grove Dictionary of Music Online, ed. L. Macy.

    http://www.grovemusic.com. Accessed 7 December, 2004.57

     Claude Bolling: Suite for Flute and Jazz Piano, Columbia Records M 33233, 1975, Vinyl.58

     Claude Bolling: Toot Suite for Trumpet and Jazz Piano, CBS Records FM 36731, 1981, Vinyl.59

      Jacques Loussier Trio: Ravel’s Bolero, Telarc CD-83466, 1999, CD.

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    Gulda and American jazz pianist / composer, Chick Corea (1941- ), recorded an album of

    two piano improvisations in 1983, The Meeting.64 An Austrian big band (with fewer

    saxes, trumpets and trombones, but with tuba and vibraphone), The Vienna Art Ochestra,

    was formed in 1977 by Swiss pianist / composer / arranger, Mathias Ruegg (1952- ).

    The orchestra has a large repertoire which includes the music of Scott Joplin, Duke

    Ellington, Charles Mingus, Lennie Tristano, Eric Dolphy, Anthony Braxton and Erik

    Satie, and has toured extensively. It took part in the Gunther Schuller Festival in Linz,

    Austria in 1996.65 

    American composer / arranger Patrick Williams (1939- ) received a Cable Ace Award,

    and a Pulitzer Nomination, and Grammy Nomination for his American Concerto for Jazz

    Quartet and Orchestra from 1980.66

     It was recorded by the London Symphony Orchestra

    and Phil Woods - alto sax, Dave Grusin - piano, Chuck Domanico - bass and Grady Tate

    - drums, and released by Columbia Records.67

     

    During the 1970s, Miles Davis, always the innovator, took an interest in the music of

    German pioneer in classical electronic music and open forms, Karlheinz Stockhausen.68

     

    63 Gerhard Brunner and Martin Elste, “Gulda, Friedrich,” in The New Grove Dictionary of Music Online,

    ed. L. Macy. http://www.grovemusic.com. Accessed 7 December, 2004.64

     Chick Corea and Friedrich Gulda: The Meeting, Phillips Digital Classics 410 397-2, 1983, CD.65

     Klaus Schultz, “Vienna Art Orchestra,” in The New Grove Dictionary of Music Online,ed. L. Macy.

    http://www.grovemusic.com. Accessed 7 December 2004.66

     Jay Chattaway, “Artists at Work - Patrick Williams,” in The Society of Composers and Lyricists’

    Website, http://www.thescl.com/site/scl/content.php?type=1&id=5958, Accessed 30 December 2004.67

     Les Tomkins, “Phil Woods - The First English Tour,” in

    http://www.jazzprofessional.com/interviews/Phil%20Woods_2.htm, Accessed 30 December 2004.68

     Frank Tirro, Jazz: A History, 411.

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    He was also experimenting with new sounds, eg. his album Bitches Brew, from 1970,69

     

    produced by Teo Macero. In 1985 Davis went to Copenhagen, Denmark to record

     Aura,70  by Danish composer Palle Mikkelborg (1941- ) who has performed with

    Abdullah Ibrahim, Jan Garbarek, Gil Evans, George Russell, Michael Gibbs and Markus

    Stockhausen. Aura is a ten movement suite (of composition and improvisation) for

    electric sounds and the acoustic combination of Davis’ trumpet with

    John McLaughlin - electric guitar, Vincent Wilburn - electric drums and a large

    European recording band with synthesizers and percussion. On White, Davis joins

    himself in an overdubbed duet, accompanied by percussionist Marilyn Mazur with

    triangles, cymbals, and chimes. Yellow begins with oboe and harp accompanied by the

    orchestra, which later swells into full force with Davis at the helm. Green shows the

    influence of Charles Ives and the beauty of nature is described by synthesizers,

    trombones, reeds, brass and the trumpet of Davis. In this authors opinion, Aura

    encompasses all the characteristics of a confluent  orchestral work with electronic effects,

    and a combination of contemporary Western art music, jazz improvisation and rock

    music.

    German trumpet player Markus Stockhausen (1957- ), son of Karlheinz, along with

    American jazz bassist Gary Peacock recorded Markus Stockhausen and Gary Peacock:

    Cosi lontano...quasi dentro,71

     in 1988. It is a combination of avant-garde jazz, use of

    69  Miles Davis: Bitches Brew, CBS Records CBS 460602 2, 1970, Re-release on CD.

    70  Miles Davis: Aura, CBS Records CBS 463351 2, 1989, CD.

    71  Markus Stockhausen and Gary Peacock: Cosi Lontano.......Quais Dentro, ECM Records ECM 1371

    837111-2, 1989, CD.

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    synthesizers and electronic effects and improvisation - an outgrowth of jazz and the

    European tradition.

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     From the 1990s to 2004

    Don Sebesky (1937- ), American composer, arranger, and trombonist, had been

    influenced by jazz and the music of Samuel Barber, as well as the European music of J.S.

    Bach, Handel, Brahms, Hindemith, Stravinsky and especially Bartok (Sebesky is of

    Hungarian descent). He did some arrangements for the Stan Kenton Orchestra and in the

    late 1990s arranged and recorded tributes to Duke Ellington and Bill Evans (includes

    Peace Piece for harp and orchestra). His scores for film and television combine elements

    of jazz, classical music and rock.72 Three Works for Jazz Soloists and Symphony

    Orchestra (1999),73

     is played by the Royal Philharmonic Orchestra, conducted by Harry

    Rabinowitz, M.B.E., and features:

    John Faddis - trumpet and fluegelhorn

    Bob Brookmeyer - trombone

    Alex Foster - alto sax

    Joe Beck - guitar

    Gordon Beck, Don Sebesky - piano

    Richard Davis - bass

    Jimmy Madison - drums.

    The recording features a re-construction and arrangement of Igor Stravinsky’s The Rite of

    Spring, and Sebastians’s Theme, a composition and arrangement inspired by a theme

    72 Patrick T. Will, “Sebesky, Don,” in The New Grove Dictionary of Music Online, ed. L. Macy.

    http://www.grovemusic.com. Accessed 14 April 2003.73

      Don Sebesky: Three Works for Jazz Soloists and Symphony Orchestra, DCC Jazz DJZ-63, 1979, Re-

    release on CD.

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    from J.S. Bach. However, the composition Bird and Bela in Bb, “A musical account of

    an imaginary meeting between Charlie Parker and Bela Bartok in the form of a Concerto

    for Jazz Quintet and Orchestra in the key of Bb,” is a brilliant example of combining

    such opposing ensembles, creating interaction and opportunity for improvisation. It is in

    conventional three movement concerto form, the second and third movements connected

    with a drum roll. The thematic material, and the members of the quintet are introduced

    one by one in the first movement, which has a free blues improvised section with big

    band brass-like backgrounds followed by a short recapitulation. The second movement is

    a ballad in slow three part song form, not in strict time initially, which features an

    angular piano solo, with orchestral backgrounds. The third movement is in rondo form

    which contains a fugue. A recapitulation from the first movement ends the last

    movement.

    American jazz pianist Lyle Mays (1953- ), has worked with Eberhard Weber and Pat

    Matheny, amongst others. He was among the first keyboard players to use a polyphonic

    synthesizer in concert. He recorded a new album called Lyle Mays Solo in 2000. On

     Improvisation for Expanded Piano, he recorded the acoustic piano sound and blended it

    with computer generated samples to achieve orchestral proportions ,74 thus creating a

    fusion between jazz and computer music.

    In 2000, Terry Teachout reflected:

    74  Lyle Mays Solo, Warner Bros 10019-6908, 2000, CD.

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    ....it may be the future of attempts to synthesize jazz and classical music lies not in third stream works

    for traditional classical media or mixed groups but in substantially through-composed instrumental

    pieces written for large and medium-sized jazz ensembles.75

     

    Compositions which fit this mould have come from George Russell, Jazz in the Space

     Age (1960) and Living Time (1972), and Dizzy Gillespie’s former arranger, Lalo

    Schifrin (1932- ) The New Continent  from 1962 (Schifrin also composed Jazz Suite on

    the Mass Texts which was recorded in 1965). Recent extended compositions which

    contain challenges of form and complex harmony and counterpoint, have come from Bob

    Brookmeyer (1929- ), Celebration (1997), Bill Holman, All About Thirds (1998) and

    Maria Schneider, Dissolution76 (1998 - 20mins 46secs), featured on the album

     Allegresse77

     (2000), composed for the ballet The Hand That Mocked, The Heart That Fed  

    at the American Dance Festival.

    Composer, arranger and bandleader, Maria Schneider (1960- ), was born in Minnesota,

    USA. She learned piano, clarinet and violin before her studies in theory and composition

    at the University of Minnesota. She moved to New York for postgraduate studies in jazz

    and contemporary writing at Eastman School of Music, where she studied with Rayburn

    Wright. She has been influenced by Ravel, Hindemith, Webern, Copland, Ogerman,

    Mingus and Monk. She worked as an apprentice for Gil Evans, who left a lasting imprint

    on her work, from 1985-88. In 1986-1991 she studied with Bob Brookmeyer and

    75 Terry Teachout, “The Third Stream and After,” 355.

    76 ibid., 356.

    77  Maria Schneider Orchestra: Allegresse, ENJA Records ENJ-9393 2, 2000, CD.

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    wrote pieces for the Village Vanguard Orchestra. She was awarded the International

    Association of Jazz Educators Gil Evans Fellowship Award in 1991, which

    commissioned the composition Evanescence. In 1992 she formed her own big band,

    which has been playing at Visiones in Greenwich Village every Monday night since

    1993. In 1995 she was commissioned by the Monterey Jazz Festival to present the suite

    Scenes from Childhood .

    The Maria Schneider Jazz Orchestra has toured Europe and the Far East. Orchestras

    which she has conducted include the Carnegie Hall Jazz Orchestra, Orchestre National de

    Jazz in Paris, the Radioens Big Band, the Stockholm Jazz Orchestra 78 and the Australian

    Art Orchestra in Sydney. She has been placed in many Downbeat,  Jazztimes, Readers

    and Critics Polls as arranger / composer. The albums  Evanescence (1994)79

     and Coming

     About 80 (1996) have been nominated for Grammy Awards.

    In this author’s opinion, Maria Schneider’s music reflects a combination of big band

    music of the twentieth century, rock music and contemporary Western art music. Each

    composition is like an adventurous trip during which one never knows what to expect

    next. Some of her compositions, all exhibiting a variety in combination of these, show

    strong confluent  tendencies. As in the music of Gil Evans, great care is given to the

    variety of timbres such a jazz orchestra can produce, polyphonic textures, and cluster-like

    78 Gary Kennedy, “Schneider, Maria.” in The New Grove Dictionary of Jazz, 2nd ed., ed. Barry Kernfeld

    (London: Macmillan Publishers, Ltd., 2002), Vol. 3, 521-522.79

      Maria Schneider Jazz Orchestra: Evanescence, ENJA Records ENJ-80482, 1994, CD.80

      Maria Schneider: Coming About , ENJA Records ENJ-9069 2, 1996, CD.

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    voicings, but always with a contemporary approach and continuous development of

    thematic material. As in Duke Ellington’s orchestra, most of the musicians in Schneider’s

    orchestra are devoted long-time members. The reed players double on piccolo, flute, alto

    flute, oboe, English horn, clarinet, and bass clarinet. The brass section includes a tuba

    and the double bass player doubles on electric bass. From Evanescence, in Gush: 

     Musical Example 4 

    the rhythm section and bass clarinet retain their ostinato-like rhythms throughout the

    whole piece, even during the soprano sax solo, (see example above). The composition 

    Some Circles has a slow opening section, (repeated at the end), which displays brilliant

    polyphonic writing. Apart from chord symbols, Schneider also suggests modes and scales

    to her soloists, always welcoming their contributions to her compositions.81 

    81  Maria Schneider: Evanescence - Complete Scores, ed. Fred Sturm, (New York: Universal Edition UE

    70008, 1998), 125-140 and 176-207.

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    The album Coming About  includes Scenes from Childhood: 1. Bombshelter Blast, 2.

     Night Watchmen, 3. Coming About. In the first two movements, Schneider uses the

    sounds of the seventies - her teenage years - i.e. the fuzzy electric guitar and use of the

    brass similar to the small big band Blood, Sweat and Tears. The third movement paints a

    picture of a sailing yacht on a lake in the summer, oblivious of anything negative. The

    outcome of the suite is a confluence of jazz and rock music, improvisation and

    contemporary harmony.

    The album Allegresse reflects Schneider’s love of dance and movement. Hang Gliding

    seems to alternate per bar between 6/8 and 5/8. Nocturne (senza percussion) features the

    woodwinds in the opening section, followed by a piano solo backed by the

    orchestra in the style of a slow movement from a third stream piano concerto. Allegresse,

    which was commissioned by the Metropole Orchestra, contains a straight 8’s feel in the

    drums, dissonant “cries” from the reed and brass sections, and plenty of colour.

    The 2004 release by the Maria Schneider Orchestra Concert in the Garden has been

    nominated for several Grammy Awards. Maria Schneider maintains a busy performance

    schedule for her orchestra and for herself as conductor .82 

    82 http://www.mariaschneider.com. Accessed 9 December 2004.

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    On the African Front

    Because of an African background, this author has a keen interest in traditional and

    popular sub-Saharan African music, and the fusion of African music with contemporary

    Western art music and/or jazz.

     African Sanctus (1973)83 by English-born composer and ethnomologist, David

    Fanshawe (1942- ), was inspired by his travels to Egypt, Sudan, Uganda and Kenya in

    1969-1972.84  It is an unorthodox setting of the Latin Mass which integrates a recording

    of traditional African music by Bwala dancers from Uganda, with a Western choir, an

    operatic soprano, a “light” soprano, a shouter, African drummer, rock drummer, two

    percussion, electric guitar, bass guitar, piano and Hammond organ.

    South African-born Kevin Volans (1949- ), a former student of Karlheinz Stockhausen,

    combines elements of traditional African music and contemporary Western art music in

    his composition for string quartet White Man Sleeps85

     (1985). The music draws on the

    colours, textures, landscape, bird and insect sounds from Africa.

    83  David Fanshawe: African Sanctus, Phillips Classics 426055-2, 1973. Re-release on CD.

    84 David Fanshawe, African Sanctus: A Story of Travel and Music, (London: Collins and Harvill Press,

    1975), 176.85

     Kronos Quartet: Pieces of Africa, Elektra Nonesuch 7559-79275-2, 1992, CD.

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    George Russell and the Living Time Orchestra recorded The African Game86

     in 1986,

    which is a combination of jazz, African music and contemporary Western art music.

    New York jazz singer Bobby McFerrin (1950- ) recorded the African influenced 

    Kalimba Suite on the album Beyond Words in 2002, imitating the sound of the thumb

    piano in his singing.

    New Zealand-born composer / jazz pianist, Mike Nock (1940- ) composed Dance of the

    Global Village which is featured on the album Dark and Curious (1990).87 It begins with

    percussion, followed by flute with echo effects, tuned percussion and African ostinato

    patterns on the bass, entries of the drums and piano following next. A piano solo follows,

    maintaining the same character.

    Tall Stories by Australian-born composer / saxophonist Sandy Evans (1960- ) is featured

    on the album Tall Stories (1994)88

     by the hugely successful Australian jazz ensemble

    Ten Part Invention:

    John Pochee - drums

    Roger Frampton - piano / sopranino sax

    Steve Elphick - double bass

    Miroslav Bukovsky - trumpet / flugelhorn / percussion

    Warwick Elder - trumpet

    86 George Russell and The Living Time Orchestra: The African Game, Blue Note/Manhattan Records CDP-

    7 46335 2, 1986, CD.87

      Mike Nock: Dark and Curious, ABC Records 846 873-2, 1990, CD.88

     Ten Part Invention: Tall Stories, Rufus Records RF 006, 1994, CD.

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    James Greening - trombone

    Bernie McGann - alto sax

    Bob Bertles - alto / baritone / clarinet

    Sandy Evans - tenor / soprano / flute

    Ken James - tenor / soprano / flute.

    In Tall Stories, a unison line in the trombone and lower saxes is stated, a repeat including

    the trumpets. Drums and an ostinato bass line enter in an African 12/8 feel. A line in

    parallel fourths in the sopranino and two soprano saxes follow, and a mosaic of ostinato

    patterns on a modal base is created. During the trombone solo the ensemble accompanies

    in a tapestry of ostinati. The bass solo is unaccompanied, followed by a trumpet solo with

    similar backing as in the trombone solo. It is a very powerful and effective piece in a

    blend of jazz and African music in this author’s opinion.

    The history of the music of Black South Africans has been documented with great care

    by David Coplan, in the book  In Township Tonight! 89 Especially the Cape Town-born

    pianist Dollar Brand / Abdullah Ibrahim (1934) has earned international acclaim.

    Brand left South Africa for Zurich in 1962, and after hearing Brand’s trio, Duke

    Ellington organized a recording session for them in 1963. Brand went to New York in

    1965 to appear at the Newport Jazz Festival, thanks to Ellington, who later appointed

    Brand as his substitute during a tour of his orchestra on the East Coast. Brand also

    89 David Coplan, In Township Tonight!, (New York: Longman Inc., 1985).

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    performed at Carnegie Hall, Lincoln Centre, Village Vanguard, and several colleges and

    universities. He received a Rockefeller Grant and studied with Hall Overton. In 1972 

    Brand toured with his 10-12 piece band and performed with the Jazz Composer’s

    Orchestra in New York. During the late 1970s he recorded several duos with Max Roach

    and Archie Schepp amongst others. He returned to South Africa for an extended period in

    1990, receiving several honorary doctorates. He performed at the inauguration of

    President Nelson Mandela in 1994. In the 1990s he performed with symphony and

    chamber orchestras,90

     eg. African Suite for Trio and String Orchestra, recorded in

    Switzerland in 1997.91 Brand’s music contains a confluence of traditional and popular

    African music, jazz (especially the piano styles of Ellington and Monk) and

    contemporary Western art music.

    This is most evident on his solo albums African Piano92

     and Anthem for New Nations.93

     

    The ensemble album Voice of Africa94

     (1988) includes The Pilgrim. It begins with solo

    piano. A piano bass pattern is later joined by an ostinato in the bass, then by percussion

    and flute improvisation. Brand / Ibrahim continues to tour internationally and is based in

    Cape Town and New York .95 

    90 Ed Hazel and Barry Kernfeld, “Ibrahim, Abdullah [Brand, Dollar: Brand, Adolph, Johannes],” in The

     New Grove Dictionary of Music Online, ed. L. Macy. http://www.grovemusic.com. Accessed 8 December,

    2004.91  Abdullah Ibrahim: African Suite for Trio and String Orchestra, Enja Records JENJ 3314-2, 1998, CD.92

      Dollar Brand: African Piano, ECM Records 835 020-2, 1973, Re-release on CD.93

      Dollar Brand: Anthem for New Nations, Denon / Nippon Columbia Denon 38C38-7261, 1984, CD.94

      Dollar Brand/Abdullah Ibrahim: Voice of Africa, Kaz Records KAZ CD 101, 1988, CD.95

     Dollar Brand/Abdullah Ibrahim, Interview by author, Conversation, 8 January 2004, Cape Town, South

    Africa.

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    4. Quiet Song in the Twilight  

    5. Dance of the Witch-doctor  

    6. Mbira Song carried by the Night Breezes 

    7. Dance of the Wind Spirit.

    The internationally acclaimed Soweto String Quartet released a new recording called

    Our World98 in 2004. Their music is a ground breaking cross-over of traditional African

    music, native African township rhythms, Cape Malay music, pop, jazz and classical 

    music, and they have been very active during the past decade or so.

    South African composer / arranger / educator / jazz pianist, Noel Stockton (1930- ) has

    composed several pieces in third stream / confluent style:

     Mangaung Suite for Wind Band (early 1990s - African / contemporary)

    Concerto for Stage Band  in 3 movements (1994 - jazz / contemporary)

    Suite for String Quartet and Clarinet (1999 - contemporary)

    Sol y Sombra - Suite for String Quartet, Clarinet and Castanets (1999 - contemporary)

     Invictus - Orchestral Prelude for Jazz Quartet and Symphony Orchestra

    (2004 - Western Art Music with Jazz Improvisation, also includes an African lullaby;

    Commissioned by SAMRO for the 10th Anniversary of Democracy in South Africa;

    Premiered in Bloemfontein in November 2004 by the Free State Symphony Orchestra

    and Jazz Quartet, conducted by Chris Dowdeswell).99 

    98 Soweto String Quartet: Our World, BMG Africa 82876595422, 2004, CD.

    99 Noel Stockton, Interview by author, Written notes, Bloemfontein, South Africa.

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    Composer and lecturer, Mike Campbell (1953- ) was born in Durban and studied jazz at

    the North Texas State University, USA in the early 1980s. He is currently Chair of Jazz

    Studies at the University of Cape Town, where he completed his Masters in Composition,

    as well as a PhD. Campbell is very much involved in a mixture of activities including

    African music, jazz and contemporary Western art music. According to him, a high level

    of stylistic fusion is currently taking place in South Africa. His own compositions 

    include:

    Suite for Jazz Orchestra (for Symphonic Jazz Orchestra in 4 movements)

    Shades of Blue (Rhapsody for Symphonic Jazz Orchestra) 

     Zishubile: Three Parts for Band  (Stage Band) 

    CT Kwela (for Stage Band)

    Sunspots (for Stage Band)

    Sermon (for Stage Band).100 

    100 Mike Campbell, Interview by author, 29 June 2002, Minidisc recording, Sydney.

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    Third Stream / Confluent Music in Australia

    In Australia several prominent composers have composed third stream / confluent  music

    for solo instruments, chamber ensembles, jazz ensembles and symphony orchestras - the

    avant-garde of contemporary art music, jazz and rock finding common ground and being

    influential despite its small audience.101

     

    Don Banks (1923-1980), highly regarded jazz musician and composer, was born in

    Melbourne and was already involved in the jazz circles in his teens. He worked with the

    visiting Duke Ellington in 1949. Banks studied at the University of Melbourne,

    continuing his studies in composition in London with Matyas Seiber 1950-52, with

    Milton Babbitt in Salzburg in 1952, with Luigi Dallapiccola in Florence and with Luigi

    Nono back in London in 1956, where he remained as arranger, composer (including

    films) and jazz pianist until 1971. Banks returned to Australia permanently in 1972, and

    was the first Chairman of the Music Board of the Australia Council, Head of

    Composition and Electronic Music at the Canberra School of Music 1973-77 and Chair

    of Composition at the NSW State Conservatorium of Music 1978-80,102 (now known as

    the Sydney Conservatorium of Music, University of Sydney).

    Banks became established as an avant-garde composer, but also composed several third

    101 John Clare and Gail Brennan, Bodgie Dada and The Cult of Cool, (Sydney: University of NSW Press,

    1995), 188.102

     Michael Barkl and Bruce Johnson, “Banks, Don,” in The Oxford Companion to Australian Music, ed.

    Warren Bebbington (Melbourne: Oxford University Press, 1997), 46.

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    stream works, such as Equation 1 (1963) and Equation 2 (1969) for ensemble including

     jazz instrumentalists; and Prelude, Night Piece and Blues (1968) 103 for clarinet and

    piano. Three Short Pieces for voice and jazz quartet (1971) and Settings from Roget  

    (1966) were written for Cleo Laine and the John Dankworth Quartet. Banks produced

    much electronic music and besides purely electronic music, he also combined it with

    traditional composition, as in Intersection (1969) and the audio-visual medium of

    electronics, tape and laser beam as in Synchronos ‘72. Meeting Place for jazz group,

    chamber ensemble and synthesizer, (commissioned by the London Sinfonietta in 1970),

    in six movements of varied orchestration, and Equation 3 (1972) for chamber group, jazz

    quartet and electronics, reflect his workmanship in serialism, bebop and electronics.104 

     Nexus, (which means tie or link), three movements for orchestra and jazz quintet, was

    commissioned and premiered by the Staatstheater Kassel and the Johnny Dankworth

    Quintet in 1971. It was recorded in 1987 at the Sydney Opera House by the Sydney

    Symphony Orchestra, conducted by Stuart Challender, and the Judy Bailey Quintet:

    Judy Bailey - piano

    Don Burrows - saxophone / flute

    John Hoffman - trumpet

    Ed Gaston - double bass

    Ron Lemke - drums.105 

    103  Don Banks: A Tribute in Memoriam, Australian Music Centre HEL Music 002, 1997,CD.

    104 Philip Bracanin, “Don Banks,” in Australian Composition in the Twentieth Century, ed. Frank Callaway

    and David Tunley (Melbourne: Oxford University Press, 1978), 111.105

      Nexus/Nocturnes, Vox Australis VAST 006-2, 1991, CD.

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     Nexus (19mins 31secs) is accessible to a broad audience, contains improvised solos by

    all the jazz players, treats the small and large groups both in a concerto grosso fashion

    and as a united force. It has withstood the test of time.

    In the first movement both the quintet and orchestra present the melodic content and

    there are solos for all five jazz players. The second movement is a ballad which contains

    a trumpet solo and orchestral interlude. In the third movement the rhythm section

    maintains the rhythmic feel underneath the orchestral forces, except in a slow contrasting

    middle section in 8-part harmony. In 2001 Nexus was performed in the Sydney Town

    Hall by the Sydney Conservatorium Orchestra and a quintet consisting of students from

    the Jazz Studies Unit, led by pianist Jackson Harrison.

    English-born Roger Frampton (1948-2000) settled in Australia in 1966 and taught at the

    Jazz Studies Unit of the Sydney Conservatorium for more than 20 years. Frampton was a

    brilliant pianist, saxophonist and composer and contributed a great deal to the modern

     jazz scene in Australia. He completed his PhD at the University of Wollongong shortly

    before his death. He was well known for his prepared-piano performances and modern

     jazz compositions for Ten Part Invention. Frampton was a founding member of this

    leading large contemporary jazz ensemble in Australia.106 Noteworthy for its confluence 

    of contemporary Western art music and jazz is his album with the experienced

    American-born jazz trumpet maestro, Don Rader: Modern Jazz Duo: Off the Beaten

    106 Roger, T. Dean, “Frampton, Roger,” in The New Grove Dictionary of Jazz, 2nd ed., ed. Barry Kernfeld

    (London: Macmillan Publishers, Ltd., 2002), Vol. 1, 843.

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    Track 107

     from 1998, the title track reflecting the overall style. Frampton - piano /

    sopranino sax / tenor recorder, and Rader - flugelhorn / trumpet / pocket trumpet, explore

    new territories. The absence of bass and drums liberates the flow of the musical

    concepts. All the tracks are recorded live, Frampton switching instruments frequently.

     High Jinks features call and response practises (as found in traditional African, and

    Indian music), as well as avant-garde / bebop-like unison lines.

    A fellow musician of Frampton, Australian-born Bruce Cale (1939- ), jazz double bass

    player and composer, recorded a most forward-looking album, The Bruce Cale Quartet

    at the Opera House (1978),108

     with the outstanding, sensitive pianist, Paul McNamara,

    Bob Bertles - saxophone and Alan Turnbull - drums. It is a mix of modern jazz and

    contemporary art music. Cale went to study at Berklee School of Music from 1966 on a

     Down Beat  Jazz Study Grant. He also studied with well known composer George Russell

    in the USA in 1981. He performed his Concerto for Double Bass and Orchestra with the

    Melbourne Symphony Orchestra later in 1981. During the 1980s the Sydney-based Bruce

    Cale Orchestra recorded three albums. Cale now resides in Tasmania, and his

    compositions, which include Afro / American and Brazilian rhythms and reflect his long

    career as improviser, have won several awards.109

     

    American-born William Motzing (1937- ), former jazz and orchestral trombonist,

    107  Modern Jazz Duo: Off The Beaten Track, Tall Poppies Records TP 130, 1998, CD.

    108 The Bruce Cale Quartet at the Opera House, Polygram Records 6357 724, 1978, Vinyl.

    109 Roger, T. Dean, “Cale, Bruce,” in The New Grove Dictionary of Jazz, 2nd ed., ed. Barry Kernfeld

    (London: Macmillan Publishers Ltd., 2002), Vol. 1, 371-372.

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    composer, arranger and conductor, has taught at the Eastman School of Music and the

    Cologne Hochschule fur Musik. From 1972 to 1991 he lived and worked in Sydney. He

    taught at the Sydney Conservatorium for 12 years and was Chair of the Jazz Studies Unit

    from 1976-78.110

     During the 1970s he composed two third stream works: The Whole

     Earth Suite (three movements for large ensemble) and Night Cries for Roger Frampton -

    sopranino sax and the Australian Chamber Orchestra.111

     Following his return to the

    Sydney Conservatorium in 2001, Motzing organised a third stream concert at the Music

    Cafe in April 2002. The main work was performed by the combination of a string trio

    and a quasi - jazz trio: Wayne Goodwin, Melissa Cox - violins, Georg Pederson - cello,

    Judy Bailey - piano, Craig Scott - double bass and Darryl Pratt - percussion. It was a

    rondo-like piece consisting of a ‘theme’ by Alison Newman, an African ‘episode’ (with

    violin and bass solos) by Nadia Burgess, a tango ‘episode’ (with piano and cello solos)

    by Bill Motzing and a celtic ‘episode’ (with violin solo) by Wayne Goodwin .112 

    Motzing’s composition for percussion ensemble, Three Pieces for Percussion Quartet:

    Cul de Sac (for xylophone, vibes and marimba)

     Ambient Landscape (for cymbals and hanging chimes) Bush Telegraph (for 12 drums),

    incorporates elements from contemporary Western art music and traditional African

    music. Motzing remains active as conductor, arranger and composer, and continues to

    teach at the Sydney Conservatorium of Music. Several of his arrangements and

    110 L. Thompson, “Motzing, Bill,” in The Oxford Companion to Australian Music, ed. Warren Bebbington

    (Melbourne: Oxford University Press, 1997), 392-393.111

     William Motzing, interview by author, 6 March 2003, written notes, Sydney Conservatorium of Music.112

     Third Stream Concert 11 April 2002, Sydney Conservatorium of Music, live recording, CD.

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    compositions (some containing a fusion with African music) have been performed by the

    Sydney Conservatorium of Music Big Band.

    Slovenian-born Bozidar Kos (1934- ) played jazz throughout Europe in his earlier years

    and came to Australia in 1965. He studied composition at the University of Adelaide,

    where he became Fellow in Composition in 1978-83. He was active in composition in

    Australia and Europe and later held the position of Chair of Composition at the Sydney

    Conservatorium until the end of 2002.113  Cross Winds, (for jazz trumpet, alto saxophone

    and orchestra), was commissioned by the ABC to commemorate what would have been

    Don Banks’ 70 birthday in 1993. In Crosswinds, Kos combines post-serial techniques,

    African polyrhythms and jazz improvisation in this confluent  work, which contains a

    great degree of instrumental integration.114

     

    Jazz pianist and composer, Paul Grabowsky (1958- ), of Polish descent and born in New

    Guinea, moved to Melbourne as a young child and started having classical piano tuition

    at the age of five. After some study at the University of Melbourne and the Juilliard

    School in New York, he worked in Munich for five years. Grabowsky returned to

    Australia in 1985 and has been active as jazz pianist, composer of film, television,

    chamber andorchestral music.115 Grabowsky is known for crossing the boundaries of

    styles frequently.116

     

    113 Markus Plattner, “Aspects of Third Stream Works” (M.Mus. thesis, University of Sydney, 2001), 45.

    114 Ibid., 47.

    115 Roger T. Dean, “Grabowsky, Paul,” in The New Grove Dictionary of Jazz, 2nd ed., ed. Barry Kernfeld

    (London: Macmillan Publishers, Ltd., 2002), Vol. 2, 77-78.116

     Jim McLeod, Jazztrack , (Sydney: ABC Books, 1994), 178.

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    Jacqueline Grenfell - sampling

    Gary Costello - bass

    Niko Schauble - drums.

    Melodic unity, melodic development, adherence to form, romanticism, unique pianistic

    sound production and tremendous lyricism can be found in jazz trio recordings of

    Grabowsky’s compositions, many of them beginning with solo piano and all including

    improvisation, such as:

    Colonial Sketch No. 1 (a celtic folk-based composition with jazz improvisation) from the

    album Browne, Costello, Grabowsky: Six By Three (1989);118 

    Stars Apart  (a waltz), La Scragga (a tango) from the album Paul Grabowsky Trio: When

    Words Fail (1995);119

     

    White Chord Dreaming (a modern jazz piece), Beyond the Black Suit  (a potential hit

    tune) and A Quiet Place (very contemporary in style) from the album Paul Grabowsky

    Trio: Three (2000).120 

    Some of Grabowsky’s compositions have been performed by the chamber ensemble,

    Pipeline, the Australian Chamber Orchestra and the Melbourne Symphony Orchestra. He

    has served as chairman of the Music Board of the Australia Council.121

     

    118  Browne, Costello, Grabowsky: Six By Three, Spiral Scratch 0001, 1989, CD.

    119 Paul Grabowsky Trio: When Words Fail, Origin Recordings OR 010, 1995, CD.

    120 Paul Grabowsky Trio: Paul Grabowsky Trio: Three, Origin Records OR 058, 2000, CD.

    121 Jeff Pressing, ed., Compositions for Improvisers: An Australian Perspective, (Bundorra, Vic.: La Trobe

    University Press, 1994), 111.

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    Born in England, Mark Isaacs (1958- ), of Iraqi - Jewish descent, emigrated to Australia

    with his family when he was four, soon after which he commenced piano lessons. Isaacs

    later studied composition with Peter Sculthorpe, and is a graduate of the Sydney

    Conservatorium of Music, and recipient of the Don Banks Fellowship (1984). He is a

    fine jazz pianist and composer who includes a mix of classical music and jazz in many of

    his compositions - it is in his “make-up” - his works having been performed by

    prominent ensembles and orchestras in Australia and overseas.122  So It Does, for flute /

    alto flute, clarinet / bass clarinet, piano, violin, viola and cello, was commissioned and

    recorded by the Australia Ensemble in 1989,123 which featured Australian composer

    Nigel Westlake on clarinets. The first movement is rhythmic and explorative, the second

    is a lyrical passacaglia, the third features ostinato patterns and throughout the entire

    composition runs an underlying jazz-coloured thread of syncopated rhythms and jazz

    chords - a work reminiscent of the music of Gershwin. Canticle for jazz trumpet and

    orchestra was premiered on 24 August 2003 by James Morrison and the Melbourne

    Symphony Orchestra.

    Internationally acclaimed jazz pianist, Mike Nock (born in New Zealand, 1940), moved

    to Australia in the late 1950s. He travelled to England in 1961, and then to the USA

    where he attended the Berklee College of Music. He performed with many great jazz

    players, established a pioneering jazz-rock group, the Fourth Way, and was a member of

    the orchestra at the premier of Gunther Schuller’s third stream opera Visitations in San

    122 Mark Isaacs, Interview by author, 5 June 2003, written notes, Sydney.

    123  Australia Ensemble: Cafe Concertino, Tall Poppies Records TP 002, 1991, CD.

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    Francisco in the late 1960s.124 He worked as a studio musician in New York during the

    1970s, played with the Thad Jones-Mel Lewis Orchestra and toured Germany and the Far

    East with different groups. He settled in Sydney in 1985 and has been a lecturer in jazz at

    the Sydney Conservatorium since 1986.125

     Needless to say, Nock has received countless

    awards and maintains a busy schedule of touring and recording. He does not divide his

    music in styles, but composes according to the ensemble at hand, resulting in several

    third stream and contemporary works since the mid 1970s, including:  

     Land of the Long White Cloud  /  Aotearoa (1982), for Orchestra with piano soloist

    (40mins), commissioned and performed by the Dunedin Civic Orchestra, New Zealand,

    1982 (live broadcast, Radio NZ);126 a jazz trio version of the slow movement was

    recorded in 1982 on the album Ondas (released by ECM), of which the title track is in

    the same style;127

     the slow movement was arranged for the Cello Ensemble from the

    Sydney Conservatorium in 2001;

    Transformations 1, 2, and 3 (1987), for String Orchestra with Jazz Quartet (25mins),

    commissioned by the Australian Chamber Orchestra for a performance at the Sydney

    Town Hall, July 1987 (recorded by 2MBS FM and broadcast by ABC AM),128

     where

    compositions by Don Banks, Mark Isaacs and Eddie Sauter were also performed;

     Nebulae (1989) for trombone, percussion, flute, English horn and piano (10mins),

    commissioned by the Pipeline Ensemble, and supported by a grant from the Music

    124 Mike Nock, Interview by author, 21 October 2003, written notes, Sydney.

    125 Robert L. Doerschuk/Roger T. Dean, Barry Kernfeld, “Nock, Mike,” in The New Grove Dictionary of

     Jazz, 2nd ed., ed. Barry Kernfeld (London: Macmillan Publishers, Ltd., 2002), Vol. 3, 159.126

     Mike Nock, Land of the Long White Cloud , Live recording, Cassette.127

      Mike Nock: Ondas, ECM Records ECM 1220, 1982, CD.128

     Mike Nock, Transformations 1,2,3; recording by 2MBS, Cassette.

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    free and lyrical, and forever seeking new territories. His compositions for jazz small

    ensemble and big band are being performed at the Sydney Conservatorium frequently.

    New Zealand-born Judy Bailey (1935- ) received tuition in classical piano, culminating

    in an ATCL when she was 16 years old. However, she focused on jazz, and soon after

    arriving in Sydney in 1960, she became pianist and arranger with a number of television

    orchestras. She had two children, continued performing and became lecturer at the Jazz

    Studies Unit, NSW State Conservatorium of Music, at the time of its inception in 1973.

    Highlights from Judy Bailey’s long and illustrious career include:

    Musical Director for the Jazz Component of the Bennelong series at the Sydney Opera

    House in 1978;

    Member of the Music Board of the Australia Council (1982-85);

    Winner of the inaugural APRA Award for Jazz Composition in 1985;

    Musical Director of the Sydney Youth Jazz Ensemble, Inc. since 1990;

    Winner of the Australian Entertainment Industry “MO” Award for Female Jazz

    Performer in 1992;134 

    Committee member of the Jazz Co-Ordination Association of NSW;

    Has amassed performances both as soloist and member of various ensembles featuring

    local and overseas artists;

    Has toured extensively throughout Australia, New Zealand and Asia for Musica Viva;

    134 Bruce Johnson, “Bailey, Judy,” in The Oxford Companion to Australian Music, ed. Warren Bebbington

    (Melbourne: Oxford University Press,1997), 40-41.

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    Wide studio and recording experience, including numerous albums and CD’s;

    Extensive teaching with lectures, tutorials and workshops;

    Awarded an OAM by the Australian Government in 2002.135

     

    Bailey has composed several jazz works, music for children, music for marionette

    theatre,

    film and television music, music for dance, and improvised music for ABC Radio.136

     

    Quoting from her CV:

    A long and diverse career has given Bailey the experience to successfully develop the composition

    and orchestration skills necessary to extend from previous Small Ensemble and Jazz Big Band writing

    to larger Orchestral works. Total fascination with the challenge of ende